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Denmark

1. Division

Upcoming Fixtures

100 matches
Vejle
AB Copenhagen
Regular Season - 1
Aalborg
Hillerød
Regular Season - 1
Hvidovre
Vendsyssel FF
Regular Season - 1
Esbjerg
Kolding IF
Regular Season - 1
FC Fredericia
HB Koge
Regular Season - 1
Hobro
Aarhus Fremad
Regular Season - 1
AB Copenhagen
FC Fredericia
Regular Season - 2
Aarhus Fremad
Aalborg
Regular Season - 2
HB Koge
Vejle
Regular Season - 2
Hillerød
Esbjerg
Regular Season - 2
Kolding IF
Hvidovre
Regular Season - 2
Vendsyssel FF
Hobro
Regular Season - 2
Aarhus Fremad
HB Koge
Regular Season - 3
Hobro
AB Copenhagen
Regular Season - 3
Hvidovre
Esbjerg
Regular Season - 3
Aalborg
Kolding IF
Regular Season - 3
Vejle
Hillerød
Regular Season - 3
FC Fredericia
Vendsyssel FF
Regular Season - 3
Aalborg
FC Fredericia
Regular Season - 4
Kolding IF
Vejle
Regular Season - 4
Hillerød
Aarhus Fremad
Regular Season - 4
Esbjerg
Hobro
Regular Season - 4
HB Koge
Hvidovre
Regular Season - 4
Vendsyssel FF
AB Copenhagen
Regular Season - 4
Vendsyssel FF
Hillerød
Regular Season - 5
Hobro
Aalborg
Regular Season - 5
Vejle
Esbjerg
Regular Season - 5
FC Fredericia
Aarhus Fremad
Regular Season - 5
AB Copenhagen
Hvidovre
Regular Season - 5
HB Koge
Kolding IF
Regular Season - 5
Aarhus Fremad
Vejle
Regular Season - 6
Kolding IF
AB Copenhagen
Regular Season - 6
Aalborg
HB Koge
Regular Season - 6
Hillerød
Hobro
Regular Season - 6
Hvidovre
FC Fredericia
Regular Season - 6
Esbjerg
Vendsyssel FF
Regular Season - 6
Hobro
Hvidovre
Regular Season - 7
Vejle
Vendsyssel FF
Regular Season - 7
HB Koge
Hillerød
Regular Season - 7
AB Copenhagen
Aalborg
Regular Season - 7
FC Fredericia
Esbjerg
Regular Season - 7
Aarhus Fremad
Kolding IF
Regular Season - 7
Esbjerg
HB Koge
Regular Season - 8
Hillerød
AB Copenhagen
Regular Season - 8
Hobro
Vejle
Regular Season - 8
Hvidovre
Aalborg
Regular Season - 8
Kolding IF
FC Fredericia
Regular Season - 8
Vendsyssel FF
Aarhus Fremad
Regular Season - 8
Aalborg
Vendsyssel FF
Regular Season - 9
Aarhus Fremad
Hvidovre
Regular Season - 9
AB Copenhagen
Esbjerg
Regular Season - 9
FC Fredericia
Vejle
Regular Season - 9
HB Koge
Hobro
Regular Season - 9
Kolding IF
Hillerød
Regular Season - 9
AB Copenhagen
Aarhus Fremad
Regular Season - 10
Esbjerg
Aalborg
Regular Season - 10
Hillerød
FC Fredericia
Regular Season - 10
Hobro
Kolding IF
Regular Season - 10
Vejle
Hvidovre
Regular Season - 10
Vendsyssel FF
HB Koge
Regular Season - 10
Aalborg
Vejle
Regular Season - 11
Aarhus Fremad
Esbjerg
Regular Season - 11
FC Fredericia
Hobro
Regular Season - 11
Hvidovre
Hillerød
Regular Season - 11
HB Koge
AB Copenhagen
Regular Season - 11
Kolding IF
Vendsyssel FF
Regular Season - 11
AB Copenhagen
Kolding IF
Regular Season - 12
Esbjerg
FC Fredericia
Regular Season - 12
Hillerød
Aalborg
Regular Season - 12
Hobro
Vendsyssel FF
Regular Season - 12
Hvidovre
HB Koge
Regular Season - 12
Vejle
Aarhus Fremad
Regular Season - 12
Aalborg
Hobro
Regular Season - 13
Aarhus Fremad
Hillerød
Regular Season - 13
Esbjerg
Hvidovre
Regular Season - 13
FC Fredericia
AB Copenhagen
Regular Season - 13
Kolding IF
HB Koge
Regular Season - 13
Vendsyssel FF
Vejle
Regular Season - 13
AB Copenhagen
Vendsyssel FF
Regular Season - 14
Hillerød
Kolding IF
Regular Season - 14
Hobro
Esbjerg
Regular Season - 14
Hvidovre
Aarhus Fremad
Regular Season - 14
HB Koge
Aalborg
Regular Season - 14
Vejle
FC Fredericia
Regular Season - 14
Aarhus Fremad
Hobro
Regular Season - 15
Esbjerg
AB Copenhagen
Regular Season - 15
FC Fredericia
Hillerød
Regular Season - 15
Kolding IF
Aalborg
Regular Season - 15
Vejle
HB Koge
Regular Season - 15
Vendsyssel FF
Hvidovre
Regular Season - 15
Aalborg
Esbjerg
Regular Season - 16
AB Copenhagen
Vejle
Regular Season - 16
Hillerød
Vendsyssel FF
Regular Season - 16
Hobro
FC Fredericia
Regular Season - 16
Hvidovre
Kolding IF
Regular Season - 16
HB Koge
Aarhus Fremad
Regular Season - 16
Aarhus Fremad
AB Copenhagen
Regular Season - 17
FC Fredericia
Hvidovre
Regular Season - 17
Hillerød
HB Koge
Regular Season - 17
Kolding IF
Esbjerg
Regular Season - 17

Teams

1. Division

All 12 teams competing in the 1. Division 2026 season. Click any club to view their full squad, match history, and detailed statistics.

Past Seasons

1. Division

Browse 16 archived seasons of the 1. Division, from 2011 to 2026. Each season page includes full standings, top scorers, and match results — useful for comparing historical performance and identifying long-term betting patterns.

History 18 Mar 2026

Founded1945

The Danish 1. Division was established in 1945 as the inaugural national football league following World War II, serving as Denmark's top division for 46 years until the formation of the Danish Superliga in 1991. This structural change elevated the Superliga to the premier tier, relegating the 1. Division to second-tier status. The transition marked a significant professionalization of Danish football, with the 1. Division becoming a crucial development platform for clubs seeking promotion. Over the decades, the league has maintained its competitive integrity while producing numerous players and clubs that have achieved European success. The league's commercial profile has grown substantially, with major sponsorship deals including NordicBet's long-standing title partnership, reinforcing its importance within the Danish football ecosystem.

  • 1945 — Danish 1st Division founded as the top tier of Danish football following World War II
  • 1991 — 1. Division becomes second tier with the creation of the Danish Superliga
  • 2017 — NordicBet begins title sponsorship, establishing the league as NordicBet Liga
  • 2025 — Soft2Bet takes over title sponsorship, rebranding to Betinia LIGA for 2025/26 season

Competition Format 18 Mar 2026

Teams12Relegation spots2

The Danish 1. Division operates as a single-round home-and-away league contested by 12 clubs, with each team playing 22 matches across the season. The champion and runner-up are automatically promoted to the Danish Superliga, providing direct pathways to elite-level football. The bottom two clubs are relegated to the Danmarksserien (third tier), ensuring competitive stakes throughout the campaign. Matches are decided on a three-points-for-a-win system, with ties broken by goal difference and goals scored. Unlike some European second tiers, the 1. Division features no playoff mechanism—promotion and relegation are determined by final league position alone.

Records 18 Mar 2026

Most titlesAalborg BK (3)

Aalborg BK holds the record for most 1. Division titles with three championship wins, cementing their status as the league's most successful club at the second-tier level.

Analysis 18 Mar 2026

Current Season Analysis

The 2024/25 Danish 1. Division season presents an exceptionally tight title race, with three clubs level on 35 points at the midpoint of the campaign. **** leads the standings on goal difference (+19) with 10 wins from 19 matches, displaying the most efficient attacking record in the division with 39 goals. Hvidovre IF and Esbjerg CF both match Lyngby's 35-point tally, with Hvidovre showing consistency through 8 draws in 20 matches, while Esbjerg has recorded the highest win percentage at 55% (11 wins from 20 matches). The promotion battle remains wide open, with Hillerød occupying fourth position on 33 points, just two points adrift of the promotion places.

The relegation zone presents a stark contrast to the competitive top tier. Middelfart sits perilously at the bottom with just 12 points from 20 matches and a goal difference of -19, indicating a significant gap between them and safety. HB Koge and Hobro are also in danger, with 19 points each, though both retain mathematical hopes of survival with substantial portions of the season remaining. The gap between the promotion contenders and relegation-threatened clubs demonstrates the league's depth, with middle-table teams like Aarhus Fremad (26 points) and B 93 (25 points) still mathematically capable of challenging for promotion.

Esbjerg CF has emerged as the standout performer of the season so far, combining defensive solidity with clinical finishing. Their 11 victories from 20 matches represent the league's best win rate at 55%, while conceding only 26 goals—among the most miserly defensive records. This balance between attack and defense positions them as genuine title contenders despite their current position on goal difference. AC Horsens, despite playing one fewer match than their rivals, has maintained impressive form with 8 wins from 19 matches and a superior goal difference of +8, suggesting they remain competitive despite their fifth-place position.

An unexpected storyline has emerged with Kolding IF and Aalborg occupying middle-table positions (6th and 7th respectively), despite both clubs' historical pedigree. Aalborg's struggle particularly stands out given their three championship titles in the league's history, raising questions about the club's recruitment and tactical direction. Conversely, Lyngby's resurgence at the top demonstrates the competitive cyclicality of second-tier football, where investment and tactical acumen can rapidly elevate a club's fortunes. The season remains remarkably open, with the top four positions separated by just three points—a margin that could be erased or extended within a single round of fixtures.

League Structure and Competitive Format

The Danish 1. Division operates under a straightforward but competitive framework designed to identify the strongest clubs for promotion to the Superliga. The 12-team, single-round home-and-away format ensures 22 matches per club, providing a robust sample size for determining the most consistent performers. Unlike some European second tiers that employ playoffs, the Danish system relies on pure league position, meaning that final-day drama is determined entirely by points accumulated throughout the season.

The three-points-for-a-win system rewards decisive victories while allowing draws to provide a safety valve for tactical play. Goal difference serves as the primary tiebreaker, followed by goals scored and head-to-head records, ensuring that attacking football is incentivized. This structure has historically produced entertaining campaigns with multiple clubs capable of mounting title challenges, as evidenced by the current season's three-way tie at the summit.

Historical Context and Evolution

The Danish 1. Division's transformation from top tier to second tier in 1991 represented a watershed moment in Danish football. The creation of the Superliga professionalized the sport at the elite level, concentrating resources and investment in a 12-team top division. The 1. Division subsequently evolved into a competitive proving ground for clubs seeking promotion, with numerous examples of teams ascending to the Superliga and achieving success at the highest level.

Aalborg BK's three championship titles stand as testament to the league's historical quality, with the club's dominance spanning multiple eras. The emergence of clubs like Silkeborg IF, which secured promotion in 2023/24, demonstrates the league's continued capacity to develop competitive sides capable of competing at the top level. The league's mix of full-time professional and semi-professional clubs creates an intriguing dynamic, with well-resourced organizations competing against leaner, more agile competitors.

Commercial Significance and Sponsorship

The appointment of Soft2Bet as title sponsor from 2025/26 onwards, under the Betinia LIGA branding, represents a significant commercial endorsement of the league's appeal. Following NordicBet's long-standing partnership since 2017, the sponsorship continuity demonstrates the league's stability and attractiveness to major betting operators. The Betinia LIGA branding suggests an integrated approach to sports betting and league visibility, positioning the 1. Division as a key asset within the Danish sports entertainment landscape.

Television coverage of the 1. Division has expanded significantly, with matches receiving regular broadcast across Danish media outlets and streaming platforms. The league's competitive nature and unpredictability make it attractive to broadcasters seeking engaging content, particularly given the direct promotion stakes that maintain tension throughout the season. The international dimension of Danish football—with clubs regularly competing in European competitions—adds additional visibility to second-tier performers.

Development Pathway and Club Ambitions

The 1. Division serves as the primary development pathway for Danish football clubs, with automatic promotion for the top two finishers providing clear incentives for investment and performance. Clubs competing in the division range from well-established organizations with Superliga experience to ambitious challengers seeking their first opportunity at elite-level football. This diversity creates competitive tension, as newly promoted clubs attempt to establish themselves against experienced sides fighting for return to the top tier.

The financial disparity between clubs in the 1. Division is less pronounced than in some European second tiers, with many clubs operating on comparable budgets. This competitive balance has historically produced unpredictable outcomes, where tactical acumen and squad cohesion often prove decisive factors. The current season's tight title race exemplifies this dynamic, with three clubs separated by goal difference alone despite identical point totals.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many teams compete in the Danish 1. Division?

The Danish 1. Division features 12 clubs competing in a single season, with each team playing 22 matches in a home-and-away format.

Which club has won the most Danish 1. Division titles?

Aalborg BK holds the record with 3 championship titles, making them the most successful club in the league's second-tier history.

How does promotion work in the Danish 1. Division?

The top two clubs at the end of the season are automatically promoted to the Danish Superliga, while the bottom two are relegated to the Danmarksserien (third tier).

What is the current title sponsor of the Danish 1. Division?

Soft2Bet sponsors the league under the Betinia LIGA branding from 2025/26 onwards, following NordicBet's previous sponsorship tenure.

When was the Danish 1. Division founded?

The Danish 1. Division was founded in 1945 as the inaugural national football league in Denmark, serving as the top tier until 1991.

How many teams are relegated from the Danish 1. Division?

Two clubs are relegated each season to the Danmarksserien (third tier), ensuring competitive stakes throughout the campaign.

API data: 22 Jun 2026 · Content updated: 18 Mar 2026